Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / Aug. 28, 1837, edition 1 / Page 2
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cta jorx toT7wina, TO HIS FEIXOW CITIZENS, Jftj. Dowwagy Jo rttaj tiom ign part, ? Mreie you mSgfctj matter The (Uf s Bltr.HamiltOBT'Adama, and $altaadgVd thhawnt n-diachMrgea, firnow bf.fcig lnott;triiiow what : Jllustriow Umfjnj: :fk t HTh Mjor pw fe1U nxl tVlak op tteiub- tecf of the eurreneyVattl to go to; work in am gC to do hi lest toward: fating" things in order again, txt ouHof hifv eonTelion the other day, R W Jjporfe thet be said there wu hat one Aonu political party Uf thu or liny other coon try, and that he Would in good time deinonatrate thb. N(MverHin'i:Wi-'.w parley pin French we dare eay, having returned - from y iVrectof the Two Poffie. YihOFoeVfha United State of North Anaer. - lln: geneTftJ,a4 to the great Dernocratie Faan 1 irjTinjpartieuIar. ' FtLoir Citizbns: You, have all by this time heard tell of my return to my na- tive land alter an aDae nee now ot over two years this grafts, and how nigh I came rest ing my t6nes along with the Two Follies' en this beach, arid all mainly owin to a no tron that Cptaialuni per took that he wis more knowing than other folks about hi9 latitude and longitude and sVwditfes and to wind up all, was willing right or wrong, Ho take the responsibility? Well the long and shor t of the matter is, the -Two Pol lies' went ashore, and there she lies now, right off a d on the bouse I am 'now in, and as l am in pretty good keeping here, I mean to stick by and wait for the high tides of September nextt and see if there is - any hopes of getting this vessel off. 1 don't mean to quu so ong as two bucks oi ui ber of this vessel hangs together. I know I sbe ls worth sa fin, .Ami if we can7t save alt, we can save part, jest enofT to presarve the node), (or there a n't sicb another craft a float or o shore in all this created airth. In tbe natral course of things, I suppose that seeing it is now more than two years . . iinr i vwpnio IDT. ei riPF irnm H rnip rn mt old friend Mr. D wjght, that I ought to tell where I have . been f and what 1 have been about; but thiis would be, a long story too long to be good jpar - nothing, and 1 have no time now to finish it if I once be gun it I'll, leave that till X eel through more important matters. I did not intend wriUnr any thing till the Two Pollies' was j$d5 tile afloat again; but seeing that all r; fke grjcat tolxs nre at work writingpri- 3 Taie reiicr furjjuoucauoo, x moujmi n was high time to begin, aifd in doin bo, as the Globe says of my "old friend the Gineral's letter, Hlash it off in the broad bold hand of the venerable chief, without reeling, &c? When;! left home the last time, on mv r. watoFrance, to aid'In keeping thing risht there. Tsat down at the atarn of the Two Pollie9, and kept mf eye on my na - tive hilla till the top of the highest one was -tost in a foz-cloud that hune over it. ; I then began "to eel considerable wam blecrop'd, and could not help thinking of the time when I was a boy, and jrheu the great platter of Inginrdumplins stood smoking on the table, and the family ta king chairs all around it; and jes then my good old; mother calling out, 4 You, JonsPy my,son; them plegy cattle are in the corn-field again, -run, my 1oy, and torn 'em nnK'nnr! awiv TM Mfl: nl whilst running I woultLkeep thinking of them dgmplins, what changes might take . nface amnnw m for t oat hark 0-in. and, in fact, whether there would be any - left at all by the time 1 got back. And jest so it was this time ; there were my : native hills, all smoking in the, distance, jesi uae arpw oi noi uumpiins, ana l go ing off to keep an eye on ' them French men What changes, thinks. I, will take place among them hiti afore I git back to them I I don't-want to underrate dumplios, forXlivedoo 'em nigh half mjr life; but -I most say if. any man wants to know how much dearer to him is his native - hills than any thing else in , alt creation, let hint stand on the starn of, a vessel go ing away frotu Vm at the rate of ten miles an hour and see 'em go dowVoa t of sight in a fog.bank, an4 he ont then lee considerable streaked, ilepend on't he haint got afcountry worthy returning to In sach'a time a man knows how to feel for his country his hull Country, and : nothing but his country.! Talk to him t then about party politic f and see how small and ?raean, and "contemptible all i thft IiHIa nnsf v' flirt v HiiTrnio nf n. squabbles appear. ' Whig, -Tory, Bank, - Anti.Bank,Hard Currency, JPaper Cur . rencj, LocoTbcOr "Aristocracy, Democ j racy, Jackson; Benton, Vati' Buren, Kin- dle-NircerVAnti-NifferMonoDolv. An- " ti-M anoDolfvrammanr End Anti-Tain- nany fjumJucle Joshuas-all becomes up;tiK.c uaii oi ran ids oi oiu . 4tecktnks and aiat worth no more, and hU trinjsins ill to the' only pint worth thinkinsr about and asI have not time to dre88.upa long story, I appeal to ev? RT KATZVK-BOBN AME&ICAM CITIZEN ( the VMV v care 10 iaiK 10 jesi now io thiokiib me, and if I am not right, let nem tll me where and how I am wrong. ne now stea all countries except -i China and the Sandwick Islinds and - invall part of Russia and I cti say that x, nave Seen no country and nn nennli that can hold a candle to usi and all that warning on our part is to feel and to act to feel and to act-and that is for every man who has got the tale grit in him to unshackle himself fronTail nas- ll P?rtJ prejudices and look to the sood n8 country as he would to his own good And that of his Umilyiand children . the wilt or wish of one. man is the law of - t, .. via Art! we a-n inupcuucm-rfiu irtnicupit:, anertbtwhrstleintotb fancies of any .mail'Vi1- or onertronV ImI seeAnylnan or set of men , lor any other man in Kamscatka first. . veii, wiiat i me puautie now uciun? We are all at odds and enil; Pabtts- that Selfish deceitful monster, has been at work, and twisted us into a snarl, and it is our business to untwist it wind off the best part for oar own ase,and throw the rest ta the devil where it came from a long with thoie Iwhoi wickedly, strive to draw lines between the people, and set one class up agin another, jest; to serve their own party purposes. It would be a usi ess task for me to at tempt to go into all thecauses9 why. and wherefore, to ehow; how we got into , the scrape we are now in it is enuffto know we are in a scrape and I don't know a shorter way to explain it than to say, that if a fanner wants to -see his farm well til - the !and-whin he whistles.he says, let T ocif doff bark- Ist itto be ao with us ? 1$ led he wdn't take a watchmaker to till itltion was laid by his own hand. What if a hatmaker, or a shoemaker, or a nail- maker, or a carpenter, or a mason, or any kind of manufacturer, wants good work men to assist him, he won't employ per sons'who don't knoiviany thing about the trade. A ship-builfler won't employ sf'hat ter or a thason to aid him in building a ship, and wisy.wersa. Some folks can kill ingins and some can manage finances every man to his trade; there is a brade and calling for every man but' if-in the course of party management tinker says he can. cut a coat better, tlian a tailor, it would not be strange if some of us should have a tin kettle tied to the tails of our coat flaps and so it is in- matters of more im portance but what, rits agin the grain with me, is, to see? some folks who have been put into High offices by us the peo-ple"-aml paid by t out of our earnings twenty-five diousand dollars a year or a bout seventy dollar t a day, besides house rent and other clippings turn round and tell us--their masters what they want done, and what we -jam do, because they say so. Has it come to this then, in this country of laws, made by the people for their own good, that any man in office,- and well Said by us for his services, shall dare to ictate to us our duty, when his duty is simply to follow the laws we chase to make through oar representatives for his and our guidance ? Shall it be .also that any man who has been in office and well paid for his services, dare to presume up on his former popularity to dictate to us, by his opinions & notions what we should dp, when it can be seen without specta cles he has made a gross mistake, and, like the fox that lost his tail in the trap, now wants all of us to cut off our tails so as to cover his mistake. If such things are to be; and we are slaves to fall into these notions, then I for one say, I'll scrape off the nails of the - Two Pollies of Downingsville," and paint on her starn The Nrgger of Araby," and any man who wears a collar may command her. Fellow-citizens iaint in the humor just now to tell yon the fatal error you are laboring under. I am one of your selves, beaten down, shipwrecked, and humbugged almost ashamed to say how uhas come about as it has because in telling you the story, I tell it to all cre ation, and that is jwhat I don't like. I would rather keep our family quarrels within the walls of the old homestead ; and that is the reason, when I was abroad and among foreigners, I heard them talk ing about and ? reading aloud the Globe, and other official papers containing mat ters I was ashamed of. I would say that Globe" was published away down in South America, and that the folks there were all kounterfeit Americans -they had papers and editors and towns all called after our own and there warn't no dependence to be put in 'm. . qui i saiu jest now, we , are in a scrape, and 1 mean to try as a good citizen, loving my country and every useful class of citizens in it, as a man should to get us out of it; We are all ashore, jest as the Two Pollies" is but we have not gone to pieces yet, nor she nother, and 1 don't think we shall but this depends on ourselves. I have khown pilots, in my day run a ship on shore, and to kiver his mistake, wish ev ery'other pilot would do the same thing. nave seen a cook spoil a Whole pot ot broth, and when turned out, laugh in his sleeve to see his successor do the same thing I have seen great politicians and Generals who have failed in their experi ments, so .far lorget the "interest of those who employed them, as to turn to and curse party leaders and soldiers, and wish to kiver up their disgrace, by wish ing their successors the same misfortune. I knew once a Captain 6h a steamboat hofdidnot know ii business, and blew up his boat and passengers, feel as happy as a bird when he lieard that - others had been as unfortunate as himself. & ?rave ly aay, that for bis 'part he was sure there was no safety in steam engines. And' now we see some folks equally ready to blow up the httll.1 Banking system, be cause in their mismanagement of it they have burnt their finzers, and now sat thit all Banks are monsters. Just so woufd a txnxsr who boasted of knowing all about a steam engine, and after hav ing tinkered changes in its pipes & valves and blown it all to etarnal smash sa? all engines are dangerous and anti-de mocratic away with them, and tet iss take to oars and poles : again ;" jest so out tnis ig enough tor the presents And till I have time to write to vou asain, let us all remember that when utcaL bad, or UQQlish men eombinei it is lime for sound, good and tnteUigettt fol ks to unite. So no more jat present from 6ur old friend i ui tettow ciuzen r J .-. lU W-NIfllG, LETTEB FROM GtfEl$T. eo astro jkjt k ea erT otma rxyt batt. If would be difficulfto name another city of rO.000 inhabitants which bas beln the theatre ' of more") toterestiBg events tban.thi : Wein America, iadeed,;know it besf as the site of the negotiation oftan important treaty concerqing ourselves? but we are not so ignorant ot the affairs of modern Burope as to be mindless of the great roU in the great game which Ghept has been can eu upon to pi ay. iiere was the refuge- of Louis XVHI. when driven a second tiraefrora his throne. Here was the getting-up of ihet famous " Pacification" in Thls was the centre of the religious wars of the middle ages. It . beheld theM-auecessive move ments of the arwiei ofLouisXIV. Marl borough, and Eugene Charles V. was born here, and the ruins of a citadel are yet remaining of which the found a its grandeur in those days was, we may estimate from the remarks which tradition-ascribes to that great monarch, when, looking down from the magnificent belfry yet standing, after his siege ofthe city, the fierce Duke of Alva advised him to destroy it. "How many Spanish skins," he asked, do you think it Wuld take to make suchu gant (glovel alMhis ?" He is said to have observed,, oji; another occasion, that he. ' could put all Paris into his gloves" and the probability is that Ghent was then the larger of the two. Ages before, in the era ot Philip Van Arteveldly Cwho was also a Ghent man J there were eighty thousand citizens capa ble of bearing arm. In 1365, 10,000 went with Philip the Good to help to drive the English from Calais. Eighteen years after, 16,000 were lost in a defeat under; the walls j tor Uhent, tnougu airee city perhaps became a free one was always fighting-t it was the fashion of the times. They were at sword's points, especially with their neighbor Bruges. -Indeed, one of the most amaziog things in'lhe history of these towns, is, how they could fight so much, and yet accumulate wealth, carrv on commerce, and even cultivate the tine arts, to so ereat an extent. It shows what an energy liberty can devel ope. at the same time that it makes us re gret such a horrible perversion of that! magniucent vigor. Yet even at me very period when Uhent drove DacK an cngusnj army of 24,000 men, under the first hd ward, in person, such was the renown ot; the city among the literati, that eveo Pet rarcli came here, from Italy, itseti, to re side. And so arms and arts have always, been nourished here, twin sisters, at one Vbreast. "John of Gaunt," of course- was a citizen. It was the birth place also of Harduin, the founder of Flemish poet-j ry, and of several other distinguished poets, as well as ot Uelvaux, the sculptor, and various distingues in other depart ments of the arts. Now for its present condition. It is a peculiarity, and a beautiful one, that it is situated at the confluence of four rivers, the Scheldt being one. It lies upon a perfect level, and is surrounded by a level, far and wide, like most of its neighbors. This is a rich, green, cultiva ted country, well intersected with trees and spotted with the flaring wind-mills of the country in all directions. These in the distance are decidedly picturesque; and looming up pretty well from the mounds on which they are commonly erected, make some small amends to the eye for the monotony of she rest of the surface. This is relieved very 'much, too, by the water, j In addition to the four tittle riversi which show themselves wherever you look, tive town itself is crossed in all quarters by. canals. It, is in fact made up of canals, as regularly as Philadelphia is made up oi squares, ic consists, in other words, of artificial islands, of which there are twenty-six. These are united by seventy principal stone bridges, anil twenty-eight of wood, so admirably pois ed that, though weighing usually over 30,000 lbs. uothing was more common', " - ' a a . .a' .. in my waiKs about town, than to see them swung round, to admit the passage 6f the various craft, by the weight of a woman's hand. There are over two hun dred of the smaller bridges. , There is an appearance of great commerce heref The canals are covered with little navigation, and the Hreets, narrow and crooked of ten, to be sure, and never anv thing like ample or spienaiu in the modern sense, yet crowded and noisy with a lively pop ulation. There are numerous manufac tories carried pn. p There is an iron foundry which employs 1,5Q0 workmen ; and such is the respect for Order and ic - dustry here, that when, three times a day, s hell rings to announce the workmen going to work, none of the bridges are allowed to be turneduntil all are gone by- How much that shows of the spirit of the people ! .How it lets one into the secret of the grandeur and wealth of these fine old towHTs;.for, after all, this prince ly style, this far-and-wide renown, these huge victorious armies, and the bloody wars, this poetry, this liberty itself, haye owed their origin to that humble source Tou would not expect to see the bridges stopped' for the ironworkers at Pans ! It would be rather for the Kingr for the army there, not for the people ;;still less for the poor. ' Where such a spirit' does reign, However, you may exbecT thrift j and here it is. ; ! A Van Buren paper in Ohio, enquires whether we mean to apply the lenhurn -buggers, to the whole V. B. party, 4 Cer tainly not We look upon tat party las made up of two areat divisions the fanm- buyers and the humbugged. -lou. Joyr. THE IDEA pF A PERFECT WIFE. . 'Jttft& statesma. jed repeaUdJy tpdeclr5, Wmidt'rh?(enterSl wroti the fbtawing beautijfulty tjescrip tite wife roornuig on the anhieTsof riaget delicately heading tlieT paper as be- 4ow, leaving her to up the blank The Character of ." Intend toive you my idea of a wo man. If it at all answersjan original, I shall be pleased j for if sucji a person as I would describe really exists, she- must be far superior Jo misdescription, & such as I must love too well to be able to paint as I ought. . . She is handsome ; but it is beauty not arising from features, from complex ion or from shape jshe has all three-inr la lugh degree, but. it is not from these she touches tlie heart it isaUithatsweetness of temper, benevolence, innocence, nnd sensibility, which a face can express, that forms her beauty. r: She has a face that just raises your attention' at first sight ; it grows on you every moment, and you wonder it did no more than raise your attention at first. Her eyes have amilrfjjigHt,' but they awe you when she please!? they command like a good man out of office, not by au thority, but by virtue. Her features are not perfectly regu lar j that sort of exactness is more to be praised than to be beloved : fur it is nev er animated. . . Her stature is not tall, she. is made to be the admiration pf every body, but the happiness of one. She has all the firmnessthat does "not exclude delicacy ; she has all the softness that does not imply weakness. There is often more of ,the coquette, shown in an affected plainness than in tawdry fiueness j she is always clean without precisene'ss or affectation. Her gravity is a gentle thoughtfulness, that softens the features without discompos ing them ; she is usually grave. 4 Her smiles are inexpressible. Her voice is a low, soft music ; not formed to rule in public ! assemblies, but to charm those who can distinguish a com pany from a crowd it has this advan tage, you must come close to her to hear it. : To describe her body, describes her mind ; one is the transcript of the other. Her understanding is not shown in the variety of matters it exerts itself on, but in the goodness of the choice she makes. She does not display it so much in saying or doing striking things ; as in avoiding such as she ought; not to say or do. She discovers the right and wrong of things not by reasoning, but. sagacity ; most women, and many good ones have a closeness and somethingi selfish in their dispositions,; she has a true generosity of temper, the most extravagant cannot be more unbounded in their liberality, the more cautious in the distribution. No person of so few years can know the world better; no person was ever less corrupted by that knowledge. - 4 Her politeness seems rather to flow from a natural disposition to oblige, than from any rules on that subject, and there fore never fails to strike those who un derstand good breeding and tfiose who do not. She does not run with a girlish eager ness into new friendships ; which as they have no foundation in reason, serve only to multiply and embitter disputes,it is long before she chouses but then it is fixed forever, and the hours of romantic friend ship are not warmer than- hers after the lapse of years. As she never disgraces her good na ture by severe reflections on aoy body, so she never degrades her judgment by immoderate or ill-praises, for every thing violent is contrary to her gentleness of disposition, and the evenness of her vir tue. f She has a steady and firm mind, which takes no more from the female character, than the solidity of marble does from its polish and lustre.- She has such virtue as makes us val ue the truly great of our own sex, she has all the winning graces that make us love even the faults we see, in the weak and beautiful of hers.. : ' Truth severe in fairy fiction drest," There is an Eastern story of a certain prince who had received from fairy the faculty of not only assuming whatever appearance he thought proper, but ,of discerning the wandering spirits of the departed. He had long labored, under a painful chronic dis ease, that none of the court physicians, or dinary or extraordinary, could relieve, and he resolved to wander about the streets of his capital until he could nd some one regular or irregular, who! could alleviate nis suuenngs. w ror mis purpose ne aon ned the garb and appearance of a dervise. As he was passing through one of the prin cipal streets, he was surprised to see it so thronged with ghosts, that, had they been still inhabitants of their former earthly ten ements, they must have-obstructed the thorough fare? But what was his-amaze ment and dismay when :he saw-that they were all grouped with anxious looks round thedoor of his? royal faier' physician, haunting, no doubt, the man to whom they attributed their untimely doom, . Shocked with the sight, ne Hurried to another part pi the city, where resided another physi cian'of the court holding the second rank in fashionable estimation ; Alasj; his. gate way; was also surroundedwitKreproachfut departed patTentSi 33iundersfruck at-such a discovery, and returning thanks to the Prophet4hat bt way atilt m being, despite prose rBper-4 The idea of a perfect when titi atr obsrretreetf and on the door wanch he presenteitto Mrs.i, one i w ww?5 f -n , m ivuHk )ii. if n J. :,lrk-tu.llfttfir rtinat -loaning Hne t&actice'nMoel etltO SUDmifr ail ine owicr-rciitrvucuptaii.ti. tiSners Co a a&nttar'irisjfraiw. grtg Vedfiml tbathecatef ghosts Jtept paceillr Heartbroken, -and "despairing-of a cureV be was stowly sauntering back tothe palate, his- despondent cheek upon his fleshless hand, was seated rOirthe doctors steps. w AjJaV exclaimeu? the:princei it is then to true tliaH hirmbf merit withers to the shade whilewtenitious ignorance, i nliabi Is golden mansions.- rhis poor neg lected . doctor, who has butane Unlucky case to lament, fclhen the bnly iihan In fwhom I caniplace ebnfidBce He rap ped; the door was openeu oy me ooctor himself, a venerable old man,, not rich. enough perhaps-to keep alooiestic toan swer his ijn fortunate cal Is. His white locks and flo wins beard added to the con fidence which bif situjion.had insnired. This "elated youth then related at full length all his complicated "ail men tf i and the still more complicated treatment to which he had l:valflr been submitted. This sapient physician'was not -illiberal their mart Viuat ??7r J7Z i" ui i iip,rtuu iHcuuuiuHsmane aoouc mennnu inings ami ne hears i of his hoary-Jiead, . most eloqoeRtlytoIdelldim1acts andhe examines and me muxiuus paiicui uiav jib tswiniucrcu his former nhvsicians As an . isnofant, murderous set,. of mortals, only fit to de populate a community. i With a triumphant look he promised i r a cure, ami gave nis overjoyed cuent much-valued prescription which he care fully confided to his bosom; after which he expressed his gratitude bypouring up onthe docfer's table a purse 6f golden sequins, which aade the old man's blink ing eyes shine as bright as the coin he beheld in wonderotis delight. His Joy gave-suppleness to his rigid spine, and after bowfng the prince out in the most obsequious manner, he ventured to ask him one- humble question. By what good luck, by what kind planet, had: he been recommended to seek his advice?" The prince naturally asked for the reason of so strange a question, to which the worthy dbcter replied, with eyes,.brimful With tears of gratitude. Oh, Sir, be cause I considered myself the most un fortunate man in Bagdad until this happy moment; for I have been settled in this noble and wealthy city for these last fif teen years, and have only been fable to obtain one single-patient." 'Ah!" eried the prince i despair, kHhen it must be that poor solitary, unhappy-looking ghost that is-Jiovv totteriug on your steps." DONT BE A TALKER. -, - One half cjf the mischief in the world is done by talking. And one half the difficulty we get into, as we are going thro lire, is the result ol our saying what we might just as well not have said. There is much wisdom in the. old maxim, "keep your mouth shut and your eyes open." There is,ely upon it. . v I do not kuow any body in any situa tion or profession in life, to whom this advice is not applicable. It is sometimes said that the lawyers live by talking ; that talking is their trade, and so'on.j but the fact is, the lawyers are -as apt to talk too much as any body, and to suffer, as much by it j to spin out a long argu ment , theynecessarily fall into the habit of f dealing in fancy more than in tacts, say ing things about parties and witnesses that do much harm and no good, and their reputation Tor candor will generally di minish in the same proportion as that for loquacity increases. ', To hear some men at the bar, you would, suppose that if they were held up by the feet, the. words would run out of their mouths by mere force of gravity , for a week at a time without troubling their brains at all. A preacher may talk too much. One ot the best sermons in the world, was the the purpose of electin? a Colonel Commandant sermon on the Mount. You may read it as reported, in fifteen minutes, v And though its style end powers are onap proachable, its brevity might well be of ten imitated, . ,. Our legislature talk too muchi About nine-tenths of all the speech making iy Congrest and the legislature, is the mere sounding brass, and tinkling symbol of vanity ami egotism. Your really sensi 6le men, such as Ben. Franklin! and Ro ger Sherman--never got up unless they had something to say, arid always sat down as soon as they had said it. - -r " Our politicians talk too much. It is really refreshing, and as tf uncommon as. iis refreshing, to hear a sensible mail talk, sensibly h:hia topic; for fifteen minutes. But if one listent to the street rant of the day, tlie whole science of pol itics seems to have become twisted into a Chinese puzzle, that no body the besfnnins or he end of. U can find When I find a neighbor? cauehf in the meshes of a slander guit, I jTel more' sympathy than iodigriatioa. He has nro' ) b ably said, in a moment bf?excitemeht4 wnsi ins cooier juugmeni wouiq nave re strained, what he does not deliberately approve himself, : and 'probably isT sorry for. But the thing is saidhi prj2e i up, aod he jias in the end vto Open his pocket forpeniBg Mi taputhIf xiMX. listen to my thortyesson.ewlb'e caught" in such iricrape aiai!; Mon'i talk too much, i .'- YfMen I parjthat a imah End Kikwi 0 vnot liver happily togeherr read oT an application for a divorce am told of a greements for separation orVny thins of that kind,, I ara Always suspicious thaj I lindicMieif lpefec ndcr stand the true secrefof the dificulty.--Mister If pcasionally pa tula at f nd httflTyf im instead 0f hoB him. K'Jv nrU ..... .1. r "It party r stands bill of- rights, until . until it n.i.:r. . inftk plfdivorie. There is.no intW such matters. But I wish I c "5 i hPK ,!MhJ? r f every husband rjfcwjife. uotft talk too much. N ;u"9 pewptc nave a Dotiit I they can talk each other into mu? H It is a mistake r in such a den.. . ter as thii, he tongue .had better b;1 tehted with playing a subdrdinaU The ete can tell a hrHr etn.... .,'P" guage of actions will make a better pression the love that grow opi'J silent su nihine, k wiiich congenial L reflect jipon eac other, js the health and most enduring. The manner 5 always sink. deeper tlian the Ianua, affection, But his is a mitter $ people are so bent upon-managing in u own way, ttiaUI doubt whether tnu vice will beyorth theTnk and the It jnay bea: singular conceit, bit r tell you what I liketllike io look at J quiet, contemplative thirughtful ol.l J - " vwwft a VVl ? the! k chin J inrwfvvcen-jys'tnumo and hn?er. He likes old faskitied-ways, old f, -tnil h to say that the prince's, attend- f0ld books. vThatold man makes no iu me worm, utrcaase ne s a regular t)j niMjivci., your oninlJ ishes himself about them. Ask h no?td ion", and if you eetit it will comen.iJ ana as cauciousiy tis ir ne believed u, be worth something. And so it is. goeT upon the principle that a man bound to speak -but if he does speak. is uouna to sayjusx exactly wuatisriti and untilrhe isure of sayinsr that,he8,, nothing? What a world would this nu uc, ii wc ncic an uiuci uiu men m sm ktaclcs, and tliouglit a great deal moreiW we talked.wyeafo 7 rue American. XAELfi IOTICJE. THE Undersigned deiros it abtolotelr ne sry for bino't cojitr ad tot certain repoj that hiiTe- jfojioine timeat preveoted mt. from bnntng vrooJp his Qardinjf Machint, . It has been reported, that the Engine i which the Machine -is propelled, has bunie nd t hat in conseooehce, the Machine hi c etl to rtei'rIt therefore, is to infon his customer hd the public in general, i the Ilpiler of id Xlacliine hat not bunted, it continues; and his ever since it was firjU tiblishcd, tp- work as well as could be wiih T II Oil AS F.GHH1SMAN Wakc-couoy August 25. 43 3t v- , I: IC7- A PROTRACTED MEETISI rjll be held arilolly SprWs, yke Count! commencing on Friday the lt day ofSeptt! bernext. We have the promise ofsomeit Preacherr ; and w el respectfully invite oiht with tbem, to cony? and help ui We rrqus uretnreo to toe toru to come and see ui. August 1P 1, of age, and hwnviFJS, about 20, with hkely CHILD.? ' ,. H - ApphrattheBegisUrOEtitt. AurustS, 1837. '.. - 4ltfl Ulilitar rVotice. The Officers Of the 35th Regiment of NortW roUna, being thelst Regiment of Wake Coos are coinmandad to attends at the . Court Hou Raleigh on the 2$h of,Augast, for the purpoM oUng for a Brigadier General. . DANIEL SCRENSHAW, . Col. Comdl T AVE Just received ?60 parraSIenV & Wood common iieaioer and Oeal shuks'I PUMPS ; which they wiU peU at their usuallj pnces t '- Aiiguit 18 A few boxes Of superior Imperii; XA just received and for sale, by " !W. di A. STUB Raleigh, Aognst 18. THE Commissioned Officers of the 28th Bd ment of Militia, are required to meet at Sod I field. Alt Mondftv thW 25fh of 8ntnmhr nelt, I aid Regiment. - By order. , D-'MePHERSONi MaiorComt August 17, 1837. - - 43 3t Trost' Sale. T tortus of a Deed of Treit made to n JLp James Blackwood fvr.jtjjxpGmen therein! tioned, 4 shall, on Monday , of August Cwonty 01 at tbe Court HouMin HUlsborough, offer w fopaahyrfit;f j ; . 4st " Fourteen UUelv tfeir roc ; and: about SEVEN HUNDRED ACRES A LANDadjcMpIrlflr Charles' Johnson an J othen,1 property of taid Blackwood- " n. 2 . A JONES WATSDN, Truit August .is. j. S Books connected with the late Merop have beea duly-asstgned.' over by him, to tM scriber, f or the hehefit of certain of bU Cr whose names are clearly specified in tbe ref euS vH,nilll HITS VWn UCCUHU . . fit, by the said Benton tJtiy. 'r All persons to himeither : by Note or Account, are rp to eme forward and make' immediate pay?1 tho Snbscriber,ia Uxomterest f the p. cerned wulnotpomit the tnctension of fartb dukerjce 4 ..Vi E R. HORT0 (-Chapel HUL July 391637. ftMHCilX E BBI WO S, LONDON teri- Lemon Syrup, -Browns Chewing Sal Aratris and Pearl Aibe in Bottles, &PrJ and Bar Soap, Just received and foe tL W. & A Crass Dleachea IJnens. t ' ' ' ' ' m mm W imtnnmA RWht niwlrued Lln -Zm' W " aaiMMW mm - jar penor article for fcmUy wo. Also, .wnrfja iMQDia amasK 'VaM iaoj&aaa we offer for aato wwrTi -e k t Twk fins x" ' I qj- vu uai) aw m-p v.
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 28, 1837, edition 1
2
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